Since there are no database dumps available yet you might try to use [http://www.httrack.com/ httrack] to download all pages.

==Goals==

==Goals==

Revision as of 15:07, 12 March 2007

The Offline Reader Expedition is a Wikitravel Expedition to make it possible to download and use Wikitravel articles off-line (not connected to the Internet), especially on a personal digital assistant (PDA).

Contents

Rationale

Wikitravel has two main target media: online use over the World Wide Web, and offline use in hardcopy (paper) form. It's possible, however, to have electronic files that you can read on a computer or a PDA even when you aren't connected to the Internet (shocking!). This could be very useful for some travellers (although there are plenty of us who can't or don't want to use a portable computer or PDA). Being able to navigate through a number of articles with a hand-held device could make it a lot easier to get around.

TomeRaiderhttp://www.tomeraider.com/ Shareware program. There's already been some work to make Wikipedia available in TomeRaider format, but it's the entire database and adds up to close to one gigabyte of data. WikiTravel will be a much smaller database, though. There are 2 different versions of the Wikipedia database available - with images and without.

Pluckerhttp://www.plkr.org/ Free Software. This has some nice features, including better support of images. It also has software included for generating new Plucker pages, which might be useful for Wikitravel.

Of these, Plucker seems like the nicest one. It's being actively worked on, and it is Free Software,
and that means that you can use it without charge, that you can give it away to others, and that you can even modify the program (or pay others to do it for you) to customize it or add the features you want.

User interface

There are several levels of UI we can provide.

Download a single article. The user would be able to download a single article in Plucker format. The link for Plucker download would be next to the "Printable version" link.

Download a group of articles. Most travellers won't be going to just one place. It'd be nice if they could add articles to a "shopping cart" of some kind, and then download all the articles in their "cart" at once.

Update articles offline. Of course, the dream scenario is that Wikitravellers could download articles to their local computer or PDA, edit the articles on the road, and then upload the edited versions when they get back to an Internet connection. This is probably a little pie-in-the-sky, but it sure would make sure we had up-to-date info.